It’s time for Drug Channels’ annual update on drug pricing trends at the largest pharmaceutical manufacturers.
This year’s review includes the following nine companies: Bristol Myers Squibb, Eli Lilly and Company, Genentech, GlaxoSmithKline, Johnson & Johnson, Sanofi, Takeda, Teva, and UCB. You can find links to each company’s data below.
These data highlight divergent trends reshaping the gross-to-net bubble:
Rebates, discounts, and other fees reduced the selling prices of brand-name drugs at the biggest drugmakers to less than half of their list prices.
When accounting for all list price reductions, average brand-name drug prices declined at three manufacturers and increased at six others.
Gross-to-net difference in price changes ranged from −12.8% to +6.3%, reflecting significant differences in the manufacturers’ portfolio mix and pricing strategies.
As I noted in last week’s gross-to-net bubble analysis, manufacturers’ evolving market access strategies increasingly aim to offset—or circumvent—growing pricing pressure from both commercial and government payers. Drug pricing flat earthers (#DPFE) will be challenged by falling net prices, while policy wonks will be amazed at the unintended consequences unleashed by our crazy system.